Reproductive biology of Agalinis skinneriana (Scrophulariaceae), a threatened species

Authors
Citation
G. Dieringer, Reproductive biology of Agalinis skinneriana (Scrophulariaceae), a threatened species, J TORREY B, 126(4), 1999, pp. 289-295
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE TORREY BOTANICAL SOCIETY
ISSN journal
10955674 → ACNP
Volume
126
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
289 - 295
Database
ISI
SICI code
1095-5674(199910/12)126:4<289:RBOAS
Abstract
Agalinis skinneriana is a rare, autogamous, bee-visited, annual plant nativ e to the Illinois prairie. Two populations differing in size were chosen fo r study: the Site M population with thousands of individuals and Revis Hill Prairie population with only hundreds of individuals. These populations we re found to differ significantly in their potential for autogamous selfing. In bagging experiments, the Revis population had a potential selfing rate of 99% compared to 85% at Site M. The higher potential far autogamous selfi ng in plants at the Revis population was associated with a small population size, no observed bee visitors, a larger ovary, increased proportional bio mass to the gynoecium, lower pollen viability, reduced pollen production/fl ower, and a lower P/O ratio compared with plants at the Site M population. The data suggest that autogamous pollination in A. skinneriana has evolved as a mechanism to assure reproduction as a result of habitat destruction an d fragmentation and subsequent small population size.